Ready for the road? Teens rush for driver’s licenses, permits

Teens see acquiring their driver’s license or permit as an integral milestone of a high school experience.

Driving often serves as an escape and allows young people to gain freedom and exercise independence from their parents. Learning a such powerful and complex skill conveys responsibility and maturity to their peers.

Erin Grier Most students begin their driving experience thinking it will be simple, when in truth, the process is long and replete with episodes that allow them to better their skills. An anonymous 11th grader recalls: “I drove in a parking lot when I was 14 for the first time. Since then, with my permit I have come to a screeching stop, driven on a medium, driven on the wrong side of the road, and backed into a parked car.”

Usually, students obtain their learner’s permits right at 15 and choose to forgo getting their license one year and a day after their permit upon turning 16. Instead, many in recent years ultimately procure their license later, around 17 or 18 years old.

Teens typically attempt obtain their permits the day after their fifteenth birthday. 85% of students in a survey conducted last month said they received their permit at 15 years old. 81% said they received their license right at 16. 31% of the students surveyed admitted to studying for a couple of months to take the test for their permit so they knew the information as well as possible.

In recent years, it would appear that students opt to start driving as soon as possible in order to transport themselves to work, school, and extracurricular or recreational activities. According to a survey of students aged 15 to 18, 82% of them claim that they wanted their license so early because they simply wanted the freedom provide themselves with transportation.

Certain students though, like sophomore Lauren Ondieki, chose to wait to start driving.

“I’m waiting because I just don’t think I’m ready for that big responsibility yet,” Ondieki said.

A number of different reasons can influence a teen’s decision to wait for their license. That same survey showed that 48% of them wanted their license or permit immediately but pushed if off for a variety of reasons and factors.

Erin Grier
“Many parents are waiting for their teens to reach 17 before they get a license. I think it’s because of all the distracted driving,” Melody Gullett, a specialist at Just Driver Training in Canton, Georgia, said.

“I think once they go through a class and they get behind the wheel it starts to become very real that they have control over this car, but this car can become a deadly weapon,” Jennifer Marletta, the Driver’s Education Specialist at the Marietta Community School, said.

A lack of driving experience proves equally dangerous. For this particular reason, in 1997, Georgia legislators established The Teenage and Adult Driver Responsibility Act (TADRA), a rigorous program created to give young drivers more experience in a lower risk setting and fully prepare them to drive. Driving schools provide young drivers with guided experience and real-world situations to navigate through.

In an anonymous survey administered to high schoolers on their experiences with driving, one student commented: “The Driver’s Ed process was incredibly boring to get through, but the portion in which you drive with an instructor was immensely helpful, and I most likely would not be driving without that experience.”

Though these programs produce informed and smart student drivers, countless teens may still lack the significant amount of confidence needed to start driving on their own. Driving requires mental, physical, and emotional readiness. The manner in which teens drive depends on various, specific factors, including social demographics, perceived environment, and the driving environment itself. 57% of high schoolers said they did not obtain their permit because they were nervous to start driving.

“The best way to become more confident is more practice,” Marletta said.

Not having access to a car may also hinder the young drivers from garnering driving experience. 55% use a parent/guardian’s car for transportation, and only 25% actually owned their own car. The other 20% stated that they shared a car with their siblings. Doing so allows teens to split the costs of gas, insurance, and occasional maintenance fees. Students who share a car with a sibling or family member show a lower crash risk than someone’s with easier access to the keys.

“They [ the parents] are the extension of the training. They have to give, by law, 40 hours of supervised driving with their teenager before they are allowed to get a license,” Gullett said.

As teenagers continue to psychosocially develop, their high energy levels can affect their driving. Recent studies have shown that reckless or accident-prone young drivers have lower levels of a stress hormone called cortisol. High schoolers learn to drive at an age where they continue to grow as individuals and figure out their identities while cultivating relationships with their peers. Personality and behavioral development can play a major role in when students choose to start driving and their habits on the road.

Erin Grier
“I think the majority are very naive when they come [into the program], and as they start moving through they start realizing the magnitude of responsibility that they have behind the wheel,” Marletta said.

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